The Hamilton Spectator

Dispute over Iran crash’s cause deepens

Trudeau continues to meet with families of Flight 752 victims

- LEE BERTHIAUME With files from the Associated Press

OTTAWA — An internatio­nal dispute over the cause of the Tehran plane crash deepened on Friday even as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau met the families of some of the dozens of Canadians killed in the crash and investigat­ors scrambled to get into Iran.

The private conversati­ons between Trudeau and the families of victims in Toronto were the latest attempt by the prime minister to reach out to those affected by Wednesday’s tragedy, which claimed the lives of 176 people, including 138 who were bound for Canada.

Trudeau attended a vigil on Parliament Hill to remember the victims Thursday, only hours after asserting that multiple intelligen­ce sources had indicated the Ukraine Internatio­nal Airlines flight was brought down by an Iranian missile, possibly by accident.

Other vigils and memorials were being held across the country Friday and are planned throughout the weekend. There were also reports that Canada was sending a 10-person team to Iran to help the families of the deceased.

While the federal government did not speak to those reports, Foreign Affairs Minister François-Philippe Champagne said representa­tives from Global Affairs Canada’s standing rapid deployment team and the Transporta­tion Safety Board had arrived in Ankara, Turkey.

“To date, Iran has granted us two visas,” Champagne said on Twitter. “We are hoping the other visas will be approved soon so that we may begin to provide consular services, to help with the identifica­tion of victims and to participat­e in any investigat­ion.”

Meanwhile, the dispute over exactly what happened to Flight 752 was heating up.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo became the highestlev­el American official to directly pin the blame on Iran, with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Australia’s Scott Morrison having made the same conclusion­s based on intelligen­ce assessment­s.

“We do believe it is likely that that plane was shot down by an Iranian missile,” Pompeo said as he and U.S. Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin announced new sanctions against Iran for having launched a salvo of missiles against two military bases in Iraq this week.

He said the U.S. will allow time for Canada to get resources on the ground in Iran and for the probe to wrap up, but added: “When we get the results of that investigat­ion, I am confident that we and the world will take appropriat­e actions in response.”

Flight 752 went down shortly after Iran launched missile strikes against a military base in the northern Iraqi city of Irbil, where Canadian special-forces soldiers have been operating for the past five years. The attack, which did not cause any casualties, was in response to the U.S. having killed Iranian Maj.-Gen. Qassem Soleimani.

Iran denied any responsibi­lity for the plane crash, blaming it on a fire in the Boeing 737-800’s engine even as it urged the U.S. to wait for the full investigat­ion to conclude and to stop spreading lies and propaganda.

In a statement published by the state-run Islamic Republic News Agency, the Iranian government said: “We recommend the U.S. government to attend to the results of the investigat­ions by the probe committee instead of scattering lies and engineerin­g psychologi­cal warfare.”

The head of Iran’s national aviation department, Ali Abedzadeh, told a news conference that “what is obvious for us, and what we can say with certainty, is that no missile hit the plane.” If the U.S. and Canada are sure, he added, they should “show their findings to the world.”

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky echoed those calls, writing on Facebook in Ukrainian that while allegation­s the plane crashed because of a missile have “not been ruled out, as of today it is not confirmed.”

“We urge all internatio­nal partners — especially the government­s of the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom — to submit data and evidence relating to the disaster.”

While Western countries may hesitate to share informatio­n on such a strike because it comes from highly classified sources, videos verified by The Associated Press appear to show the final seconds of the ill-fated airliner.

In one video, a fast-moving light can be seen through the trees as someone films from the ground. The light appears to be the burning plane, which plummets to the earth as a huge fireball illuminate­s the landscape.

Iran is also facing questions about whether it will conduct a thorough and transparen­t investigat­ion into the crash. Some of those questions revolved around allegation­s much of the debris at the crash scene had already been cleared and that the site had not been secured.

Iranian authoritie­s say they have recovered the black box flight recorders from the doomed plane.

Yet Hassan Rezaeifar, the head of the Iranian investigat­ion team, said recovering data from the recorders could take more than a month and that the entire investigat­ion could stretch into next year.

Iran has invited Canada, Ukraine, France and Boeing to participat­e in the investigat­ion, though it is unclear what role they will play.

Ukrainian investigat­ors were given access Friday to the flight recorders that were recovered from the wreckage of the plane, which was bound for Kyiv, as well as access to recordings of the air-traffic controller­s at the Tehran airport, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Vadym Prystaiko said.

Yet while investigat­ors had also been to the crash site, “there are certain pieces that up until this time have not been found or gathered,” he added.

Transport Canada, meanwhile, said it had “issued a notice to Canadian air operators advising them not to enter the airspace of Iraq and Iran due to the potential risk of heightened military activity in the area.”

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Several hundred people gather around the Centennial flame on Parliament Hill for a candleligh­t vigil Thursday to remember those killed on Ukraine Internatio­nal Airlines Flight 752 in Iran.
ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS Several hundred people gather around the Centennial flame on Parliament Hill for a candleligh­t vigil Thursday to remember those killed on Ukraine Internatio­nal Airlines Flight 752 in Iran.

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